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49","Agnès Varda","Attention Film Volé","Cinéma 58","Jump Cuts","Anti-héro","Éclair 16","Left Bank & Right Bank","What is to be done?",[12071,12072,12073,12074,12075,12062,12076,12077,12078,12079,12080,12081,12082,12083,12084],"Alexandre Astruc","Luis Buñuel","Lil Duval","Éric Rohmer","François Truffaut","Le Grand Bazar","Museoa de Oxford","Otto Frei","Porta San Marco","Richard Rogers","Saint Pancras Station","Téophile Seyrig","Viaducto de Garabit","William Strutt",[12086,12087,12088],"«Il n’est bon festival sans scandale.» André Bazin ‒ Les cahiers du cinéma, 1953","Nouvelle Vague est un film franco-suisse réalisé par Jean-Luc Godard et sorti en 1990.","The Birth of a New Avant-Garde: The Camera-Stylo",[12090,12091,12092],"Nul ne conteste aujourd’hui l’importance historique, économique et même technique de la Nouvelle vague française. Ce qui est \nremis en cause et régulièrement attaqué c’est son importance esthétique et ce même par Gilles Deleuze qui ne définit pas un concept propre pour la Nouvelle vague. L’aventure économique de la Nouvelle Vague a duré six ans. L’héritage technique : caméra légère et recours à des pellicules plus sensibles permettant de tourner dans la rue sans l’éclairage des studios, durera plus longtemps, s’éttendra aux pays de l’Est, au Brésil, au Canada, en Allemagne, au Japon, au Brésil. Esthétiquement, la Nouvelle Vague se perpétue jusqu’à nos jours par la poursuite de la carrière de ses principales personnalités et de nouvelles (Desplechin, Bonitzer, Asayas, Honoré). Les cinéastes de la Nouvelle Vague prônent des méthodes de production plus libres : scènes extérieures (le tournage hors studio), décors naturels, équipe de tournage réduite, caméra à l’épaule, improvisation* dans le jeu des acteurs, souvent peu connus ou carrément inconnus. Libéré des contraintes traditionnelles liées à la production de films à grands budgets, leur cinéma laisse une large part à l’expérimentation et à l’émergence de nouveaux talents, des jeunes acteurs et actrices inexpérimentés tels que Jean-Claude Brialy*, Bernadette Lafont, Anna Karina*, Jean-Paul Belmondo*, Gérard Blain, Jean-Pierre Léaud*, Françoise Brion ou Charles Aznavour*. L’invention du Nagra*, celle de la caméra 16mm Éclair 16*, légère et silencieuse, le goût des tournages en extérieur, imposent une nouvelle esthétique plus proche du réel. Ainsi la Nouvelle vague va décomposer le « pris sur le vif » en deux méthodes : l’une, technologique, qui consiste à repousser les limites du tournage en extérieur. L’autre, plus intellectuelle, qui consiste à créer artificiellement du naturel en mettant l’emphase sur « l’accident à la prise de vue », ce dernier devenant le témoin du « réel ». Tout ce qui était jusque ce moment là jugé comme un défaut (effets de bizarres de cadrage*, tremblement, flou*, problème d’étalonnage*, collures* visibles, montage* hasardeux) n’est plus redouté et parfois même souhaité, au nom d’une école esthétique qui se veut adepte de la mise en abyme* et existentialiste. Le tournage systématique en pleine rue va également développer quantité de trucs et astuces pour filmer un personnage au volant d’une voiture.Nul ne conteste aujourd’hui l’importance historique, économique et même technique de la Nouvelle vague française. Ce qui est \nremis en cause et régulièrement attaqué c’est son importance esthétique et ce même par Gilles Deleuze qui ne définit pas un concept propre pour la Nouvelle vague. L’aventure économique de la Nouvelle Vague a duré six ans. L’héritage technique : caméra légère et recours à des pellicules plus sensibles permettant de tourner dans la rue sans l’éclairage des studios, durera plus longtemps, s’éttendra aux pays de l’Est, au Brésil, au Canada, en Allemagne, au Japon, au Brésil. Esthétiquement, la Nouvelle Vague se perpétue jusqu’à nos jours par la poursuite de la carrière de ses principales personnalités et de nouvelles (Desplechin, Bonitzer, Asayas, Honoré). Les cinéastes de la Nouvelle Vague prônent des méthodes de production plus libres : scènes extérieures (le tournage hors studio), décors naturels, équipe de tournage réduite, caméra à l’épaule, improvisation* dans le jeu des acteurs, souvent peu connus ou carrément inconnus. Libéré des contraintes traditionnelles liées à la production de films à grands budgets, leur cinéma laisse une large part à l’expérimentation et à l’émergence de nouveaux talents, des jeunes acteurs et actrices inexpérimentés tels que Jean-Claude Brialy*, Bernadette Lafont, Anna Karina*, Jean-Paul Belmondo*, Gérard Blain, Jean-Pierre Léaud*, Françoise Brion ou Charles Aznavour*. L’invention du Nagra*, celle de la caméra 16mm Éclair 16*, légère et silencieuse, le goût des tournages en extérieur, imposent une nouvelle esthétique plus proche du réel. Ainsi la Nouvelle vague va décomposer le « pris sur le vif » en deux méthodes : l’une, technologique, qui consiste à repousser les limites du tournage en extérieur. L’autre, plus intellectuelle, qui consiste à créer artificiellement du naturel en mettant l’emphase sur « l’accident à la prise de vue », ce dernier devenant le témoin du « réel ». Tout ce qui était jusque ce moment là jugé comme un défaut (effets de bizarres de cadrage*, tremblement, flou*, problème d’étalonnage*, collures* visibles, montage* hasardeux) n’est plus redouté et parfois même souhaité, au nom d’une école esthétique qui se veut adepte de la mise en abyme* et existentialiste. Le tournage systématique en pleine rue va également développer quantité de trucs et astuces pour filmer un personnage au volant d’une voiture.","New Wave (French: La Nouvelle Vague) is a French film movement which emerged in the 1950s and 1960s. It is a form of European art cinema, and is often referred to as one of the most influential movements in the history of cinema. New Wave filmmakers were linked by their rejection of the traditional film conventions then dominating France, and by a spirit of iconoclasm. Common features of the New Wave included radical experimentation with editing, visual style, and narrative, as well as engagement with the social and political upheavals of the era.\n\nThe term was first used by a group of French film critics and cinephiles associated with the magazine Cahiers du cinéma in the late 1950s and 1960s, who rejected the Tradition de qualité (“Tradition of Quality”) of mainstream French cinema, which “emphasized craft over innovation, privileged established directors over new directors, and preferred the great works of the past to experimentation.”This was apparent in a manifesto-like essay written by François Truffaut in 1954, Une certaine tendance du cinéma français, where he denounced the adaptation of safe literary works into unimaginative films.\n\nUsing portable equipment and requiring little or no set up time, the New Wave way of filmmaking presented a documentary style. The films exhibited direct sounds on film stock that required less light. Filming techniques included fragmented, discontinuous editing, and long takes. The combination of objective realism, subjective realism, and authorial commentary created a narrative ambiguity in the sense that questions that arise in a film are not answered in the end.\n\nAlexandre Astruc’s manifesto “The Birth of a New Avant-Garde: The Camera-Stylo”, published in L’Écran on 30 March 1948, outlined some of the ideas that were later expanded upon by François Truffaut and the Cahiers du cinéma. It argues that “cinema was in the process of becoming a new means of expression on the same level as painting and the novel ... a form in which and by which an artist can express his thoughts, however abstract they may be, or translate his obsessions exactly as he does in the contemporary essay or novel. This is why I would like to call this new age of cinema the age of the caméra-stylo.”\n\nSome of the most prominent pioneers among the group, including François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Éric Rohmer, Claude Chabrol, and Jacques Rivette, began as critics for the famous film magazine Cahiers du cinéma. Cahiers co-founder and theorist André Bazin was a prominent source of influence for the movement. By means of criticism and editorialization, they laid the groundwork for a set of concepts, revolutionary at the time, which the American film critic Andrew Sarris called auteur theory. (The original French La politique des auteurs, translated literally as “The policy of authors”.) Bazin and Henri Langlois, founder and curator of the Cinémathèque Française, were the dual father figures of the movement. These men of cinema valued the expression of the director’s personal vision in both the film’s style and script.\n\nTruffaut also credits the American director Morris Engel and his film Little Fugitive (1953) with helping to start the French New Wave, when he said “Our French New Wave would never have come into being, if it hadn’t been for the young American Morris Engel who showed us the way to independent production with (this) fine movie.”\n\nThe auteur theory holds that the director is the “author” of his/her movies, with a personal signature visible from film to film. They praised movies by Jean Renoir and Jean Vigo, and made then-radical cases for the artistic distinction and greatness of Hollywood studio directors such as Orson Welles, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock and Nicholas Ray. The beginning of the New Wave was to some extent an exercise by the Cahiers writers in applying this philosophy to the world by directing movies themselves.\n\nApart from the role that films by Jean Rouch have played in the movement, Chabrol’s Le Beau Serge (1958) is traditionally (but debatably) credited as the first New Wave feature. Truffaut, with The 400 Blows (1959) and Godard, with Breathless (1960) had unexpected international successes, both critical and financial, that turned the world’s attention to the activities of the New Wave and enabled the movement to flourish. Part of their technique was to portray characters not readily labeled as protagonists in the classic sense of audience identification.\n\nThe auteurs of this era owe their popularity to the support they received with their youthful audience. Most of these directors were born in the 1930s and grew up in Paris, relating to how their viewers might be experiencing life. With high concentration in fashion, urban professional life, and all-night parties, the life of France’s youth was being exquisitely captured.\n\nThe French New Wave was popular roughly between 1958 and 1964, although New Wave work existed as late as 1973. The socio-economic forces at play shortly after World War II strongly influenced the movement. Politically and financially drained, France tended to fall back on the old popular pre-war traditions. One such tradition was straight narrative cinema, specifically classical French film. The movement has its roots in rebellion against the reliance on past forms (often adapted from traditional novelistic structures), criticizing in particular the way these forms could force the audience to submit to a dictatorial plot-line. They were especially against the French “cinema of quality”, the type of high-minded, literary period films held in esteem at French film festivals, often regarded as “untouchable” by criticism.\n\nNew Wave critics and directors studied the work of western classics and applied new avant garde stylistic direction. The low-budget approach helped filmmakers get at the essential art form and find what was, to them, a much more comfortable and contemporary form of production. Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, Howard Hawks, John Ford, and many other forward-thinking film directors like Sam Fuller and Don Siegel were held up in admiration while standard Hollywood films bound by traditional narrative flow were strongly criticized. French New Wave is influenced by Italian Neorealism and classical Hollywood cinema.\n\nIn a 1961 interview, Truffaut said that “the ‘New Wave’ is neither a movement, nor a school, nor a group, it’s a quality” and in December 1962 published a list of 162 film directors who had made their feature film debut since 1959. Many of these directors, such as Edmond Agabra and Henri Zaphiratos, were not as successful or enduring as the well-known members of the New Wave and today would not be considered part of it. Shortly after Truffaut’s published list appeared, Godard publicly declared that the New Wave was more exclusive and included only Truffaut, Chabrol, Rivette, Rohmer and himself, stating that “Cahiers was the nucleus” of the movement. Godard also acknowledged filmmakers such as Resnais, Astruc, Varda and Demy as esteemed contemporaries, but said that they represented “their own fund of culture” and were separate from the New Wave.\n\nMany of the directors associated with the New Wave continued to make films into the 21st century.\n\nThe movies featured unprecedented methods of expression, such as long tracking shots (like the famous traffic jam sequence in Godard’s 1967 film Week End). Also, these movies featured existential themes, such as stressing the individual and the acceptance of the absurdity of human existence. Filled with irony and sarcasm, the films also tend to reference other films.\n\nMany of the French New Wave films were produced on tight budgets; often shot in a friend’s apartment or yard, using the director’s friends as the cast and crew. Directors were also forced to improvise with equipment (for example, using a shopping cart for tracking shots). The cost of film was also a major concern; thus, efforts to save film turned into stylistic innovations.","La Nouvelle vague è un movimento cinematografico francese nato sul finire degli anni cinquanta.\n\nIl termine Nouvelle vague (“nuova onda” in francese) apparve per la prima volta sul settimanale francese L’Express il 3 ottobre 1957, in un’inchiesta sui giovani francesi a firma di Françoise Giroud, e venne ripreso da Pierre Billard nel febbraio 1958 sulla rivista Cinéma 58. Con questa espressione si fa riferimento ai nuovi film distribuiti a partire dal 1958 e in particolare a quelli presentati al festival di Cannes l’anno successivo.\n\nAlla fine degli anni cinquanta la Francia vive una profonda crisi politica, contraddistinta dai sussulti della guerra fredda e dai contrasti della guerra d’Algeria; il cinema francese tradizionale del tempo aveva assunto una connotazione quasi documentaristica nel testimoniare questa crisi interna, i film erano diventati mezzi attraverso i quali rifondare una sorta di morale nazionale, i cui dialoghi e personaggi erano spesso frutto di idealizzazione.\n\nProprio la tendenza idealistica e moralizzante facevano di questo cinema qualcosa di totalmente distaccato dalla realtà quotidiana delle strade francesi. Fuori dalle finestre c’era una nuova generazione che stava cambiando, che parlava, amava, lavorava, faceva politica in modo diverso ed inconsueto; v’era una nuova generazione che esigeva un cinema in grado di rispecchiare fedelmente questo nuovo modo di vivere. Così una nuova gioventù, designata dai giornali come “Nouvelle vague” si ritrova in sincronia con una nuova idea di cinema denominata a sua volta Nouvelle vague.\n\nLa Nouvelle Vague è il primo movimento cinematografico a testimoniare in tempo reale l’immediatezza del divenire, la realtà in cui esso stesso prende vita. I film che ne fanno parte sono girati con mezzi di fortuna, nelle strade, in appartamenti, ma proprio per la loro singolarità, hanno la sincerità di un diario intimo di una generazione nuova, disinvolta, inquieta. Una sincerità nata dal fatto che gli stessi registi che si sono riconosciuti in questo movimento, tutti poco più che ventenni, fanno anche loro parte di quella nuova generazione, di quel nuovo modo di pensare, di leggere, di vivere il cinema che fu chiamato Nouvelle vague.\n\nI primi registi a riconoscersi nel movimento sono François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Jacques Rivette, Claude Chabrol e Éric Rohmer, un gruppo di amici con alle spalle migliaia di ore passate al cinema, la conoscenza profonda di centinaia di film, la stesura di decine di articoli, e l’articolazione di centinaia di dibattiti alle porte della Cinémathèque Française. Proprio la Cinémathèque Française fu una tappa fondamentale per la formazione di questi giovani cinefili; fondata nel 1936 da Henri Langlois e Georges Franju, la Cinémathèque era un luogo dove venivano proiettati quei “film maledetti”, secondo la definizione di Jean Cocteau, che per il fatto di disprezzare ogni regola, di essere “uno sgambetto al dogma”, erano diventati letteralmente invisibili. Si trattava per lo più di film di grandi cineasti europei allora largamente incompresi, Jean Renoir, Roberto Rossellini, Jacques Becker, Alfred Hitchcock e di registi americani del dopoguerra, Howard Hawks su tutti. Alcuni cineasti come Jacques Demy, Jean-Pierre Melville, Jean Rouch, Roger Vadim, pur non essendosi formati nell’ambiente della critica cinematografica, condivideranno gli stessi valori, così come farà Alain Resnais, che firmerà il suo celebre Hiroshima mon amour solo dopo 10 anni di cortometraggi. A questi vanno sicuramente aggiunti Louis Malle, che non si definirà mai un appartenente al movimento ma piuttosto si riterrà emarginato dai registi aderenti al movimento, e Maurice Pialat, troppo individualista per riconoscersi in un qualche movimento.\n\nPer i giovani cinefili della Nouvelle vague l’apprendistato naturale per approdare alla regia era recensire film degli altri come se ci si accingesse a girare i propri, fare della critica non solo una disquisizione orale tra amici, ma un vero e proprio mestiere giornalistico che trovò la sua locazione ideale nei Cahiers du Cinéma, la più autorevole rivista cinematografica francese fino agli anni sessanta, che raccolse progressivamente tra i suoi collaboratori tutti i principali autori della Nouvelle Vague. Cahiers du Cinéma era un vero e proprio manifesto del movimento, ogni testo ed ogni recensione al suo interno costituiscono un programma e una definizione di un cinema prossimo venturo. È in una serie di piccole frasi esemplari estratte da svariati articoli, che emerge questa nuova concezione di cinema: là dove si dice che la bellezza è lo splendore del vero, che il cinema è uno sguardo ad ogni istante talmente nuovo sulle cose, da trafiggerle. Queste dichiarazioni di politica (e quasi di poetica), rivendicate con forza dalla Nouvelle Vague, sono frutto di una profonda esigenza di realismo che va a coincidere con una vera e propria rivoluzione rispetto alla concezione tradizionale di cinema, quel cinema ironicamente denominato “cinema di papà” dai giovani cinefili. Durante la permanenza ai Cahiers du Cinéma François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Jacques Rivette, Claude Chabrol e Éric Rohmer girano i primi cortometraggi, mentre la realizzazione di lungometraggi avverrà per tutti nel periodo dal 1958 al 1959.\n\nUn cinema, si è detto, dai toni moralistici e dalle tematiche universali, che veniva considerato dall’opinione pubblica quanto di più distante da una forma d’arte, quasi ridotto a un mero e semplice strumento di intrattenimento. L’amore e il rapporto mistico-religioso con lo schermo, portarono gli intellettuali della Nouvelle Vague a rifiutare una simile concezione di cinema, ed a sviluppare quella che loro stessi denominarono “Politica degli autori”, secondo la quale un film non coincide mai con la sua sceneggiatura, o la sua scenografia, o ancor meno con i suoi attori, bensì con l’uomo che l’ha girato. Il regista diviene così un vero e proprio “scrittore di cinema” che utilizza consapevolmente il mezzo cinematografico per comunicare con lo spettatore attraverso non solo la semplice trama, ma con determinate scelte stilistiche capaci di delineare nel loro insieme una precisa realtà artefatta e significante, che rende possibile riconoscere dai primi fotogrammi di una pellicola il suo autore.\n\nÈ ovvio che dichiarare la sovranità del regista non ha solo un significato teorico, ma che ha un riscontro anche sul piano contenutistico. Lontana dall’ortodossia e dalla classica impersonalità del “cinema di papà”, la Nouvelle Vague introdusse la personalizzazione nel cinema: un film non era più quel mezzo di intrattenimento universale della tradizione, ma era una cosa privata, un’espressione personale del regista, i cui fotogrammi non erano altro che pagine strappate e rubate dal suo diario intimo. Forse non è quindi un caso che molti dei film della Nouvelle Vague trattino il tema della fuga da costrizioni, siano esse familiari o istituzionali. Anche il fare cinema in fondo era un distacco: staccarsi dall’impersonalità, dalla freddezza di un cinema ormai stantio e fasullo, e puntare la cinepresa sulla realtà, ma senza accontentarsi di registrare la vita così come trascorre davanti alla macchina da presa, anzi dandole una forma sempre diversa, catturando così la vera “anima delle cose”.\n\nLo scopo cinematografico della Nouvelle Vague era catturare “lo splendore del vero”, come disse Jean-Luc Godard nel periodo di critico ai “Cahiers du Cinéma”. A tale scopo nella realizzazione delle pellicole veniva eliminato ogni sorta di artificio che potesse compromettere la realtà: niente proiettori, niente costose attrezzature, niente complesse scenografie; i film vengono girati alla luce naturale del giorno, per strada o negli appartamenti degli stessi registi, con attori poco noti, se non addirittura amici del regista, e le riprese vengono effettuate con una camera a mano, accompagnata da una troupe tecnica essenziale costituita per lo più da conoscenti.",{"credits":12094,"designers":12097,"description":12099},{"text":12095,"title":12096},"\u003Cp>Designed by Robert Huber, released by Lineto in 2017. Font engineering and mastering by Alphabet, Berlin.\u003C/p>","Credits",{"text":12098,"title":11894},"\u003Cp>(*1982) completed Fachklasse Grafik in Lucerne in 2006 and received a BA in Graphic Design from ECAL/University of Art and Design Lausanne in 2010. In 2012, he founded his graphic design studio in Lausanne. He has been teaching at ECAL since 2016.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>After securing a number of commissions from the fashion industry, including from Balenciaga, Lancel, Mario Testino+ and Vogue, Robert’s debut typeface LL Moderne was released at Lineto in 2017. His archaic LL Medium, inspired by late 19th-century styles, followed in 2020; and the reverse-engineered geometric companion font to LL Prisma, LL Prisma Text, in 2021. The eccentric sans serifs LL Geigy and LL Geigy Mono were published in October 2023.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Robert is the winner of two Swiss Design Awards, and his occasional work in book design found recognition in the ‘Most Beautiful Swiss Books’ competition – most recently, \u003Cem>From Concrete to Liquid to Spoken Worlds to the Word\u003C/em>, 2022. Since 2018, he has been living and running his design practice in Zurich.\u003C/p>",{"text":12100,"title":12005},"\u003Cp>LL Moderne is a humanist sans serif with dynamic curves, open counters and a high x-height. Its vertically-cut stroke endings and compact proportions make it an elegant yet robust all-weather grotesk, with the added benefit of improved readability at small sizes and on screens.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Inspired by the original work of groundbreaking type designers like Roger Excoffon, Adrian Frutiger and Evert Bloemsma, LL Moderne offers a fresh perspective on the humanist sans-serif genre. It never feels nostalgic as it is clearly rooted in the contemporary.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>The family comes in a comprehensive range of weights; its fine tonal graduation offers generous choices of grey tones for text setting. Two additional fat cuts are now available for use on billboards, signage and posters.\u003C/p>",{"522":12093},{"31":11999},{"35":12058},{"allowRouteUpdates":10,"customRouteHash":41,"consideredRouteHash":41},{"octoSubMenu":41,"isOctoOpen":7,"isOctoHidden":7,"isOctoBlurred":7,"isOctoScrolling":7,"isOctoMenuHidden":7,"isOctoBarOpen":7,"isOctoBarHidden":10,"isOctoBuddyOpen":10,"isOctoPadOpen":7,"isOctoGuiHidden":7,"hasOctoTabs":7,"hasOctoSounds":10,"menuLinks":41,"preventClose":7,"menuDirection":12106,"menuBackRouteName":41,"itemSpacing":41,"fontRatio":41,"animationCounter":41,"hasVisibleItems":7,"visibleSubMenuLines":97,"maxSubMenuLines":97,"scrollableLines":97,"scrollableOffset":97,"currentSubMenuComponent":41,"nextSubMenuComponent":41,"currentBuddyComponent":41,"nextBuddyComponent":41,"octoTabsComponent":41,"octoPadComponent":41,"currentBuddyItems":41,"octoBarGroup":41,"octoBarGroupCount":97,"activeSection":41,"activeSectionLock":97,"searchTerm":41,"searchResults":12107,"isSearchActive":7},"vertical",[]]